Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 8, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Seward or search for Seward in all documents.

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Seward's last correspondence. --"An Englishman" writes to the Sixth Carolinian, I am staggered and utterly dumb founded at the address of Seward to the "President and Secretary of the Paisley Parliamentary Refers Successions and as I am coSeward to the "President and Secretary of the Paisley Parliamentary Refers Successions and as I am confirm will be honest inhabitants of that comparatively little, transporters weaving, but now dreadfully distressed town in the West of Scotland be, when they read it. Sir, I arrived to this country a few months ago and with the came a gentleman who . The chairman know something about. Mr. Cotent Cochran, the Secretary of the Association. Unfortunately for the and Mr. Seward nearly theCounty, except in nature are similarpleasure in calling himself the --It is the only calling he has. He is tais the laughing of the people and, to their ceded above world. At though he looks for them regularly, he has not earned a breaking or a meal of kind which the memory of man, and in fact in good my nothing but to be a correspondent of Mr. Seward.
overnment it created. It declares that "unless the Federal Cabinet is reinforced with new vigor and ability the Union cause will be overthrown." As the Ministers can only be changed by the will of the President, is he thus warned to throw over Mr. Seward as a failure? Two Secretaries of War have been already dismissed, and the only members of the Government supposed to have any power are Mr. Seward and the President himself. Which of them is to go? Or are both to be deposed? There is no preMr. Seward and the President himself. Which of them is to go? Or are both to be deposed? There is no precedent for the abdication of the head of the Federal Government, and it the retirement of that great officer is covertly demanded, it amounts to a political revolution. To give force to this demonstration the New York War Committee proposes to raise two armies of fifty thousand men each, to be commanded by Generals Fremont and Mitchell, the first qualified for the post by total failures as an officer at the beginning of the war, but "sound" and extreme as a partisan. Even in this extremity